| Literature DB >> 32518767 |
Solène Prost1, Yann Philippe Charles2, Jérôme Allain3, Jean-Luc Barat4, Henri d'Astorg5, Manuel Delhaye6, Chistophe Eap7, Fahed Zairi8, Pierre Guigui9, Brice Ilharreborde10, Jean Meyblum11, Jean-Charles Le Huec12, Nicolas Lonjon13, Guillaume Lot14, Olivier Hamel15, Guillaume Riouallon16, Stéphane Litrico17, Patrick Tropiano1, Benjamin Blondel18.
Abstract
Since the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in December 2019 in China, various measures have been adopted in order to attenuate the impact of the virus on the population. With regard to spine surgery, French physicians are devoted to take place in the national plan against COVID-19, the French Spine Surgery Society therefore decided to elaborate specific guidelines for management of spinal disorders during COVID-19 pandemic in order to prioritize management of patients. A three levels stratification was elaborated with Level I: Urgent surgical indications, Level II: Surgical indications associated to a potential loss of chance for the patient and Level III: Non-urgent surgical indications. We also report French experience in a COVID-19 cluster region illustrated by two clinical cases. We hope that the guidelines formulated by the French Spine Surgery Society and the experience of spine surgeons from a cluster region will be helpful in order optimizing the management of patients with urgent spinal conditions during the pandemic. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cluster region; Guidelines; Organization; Spine; Surgery
Year: 2020 PMID: 32518767 PMCID: PMC7262704 DOI: 10.12998/wjcc.v8.i10.1756
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Clin Cases ISSN: 2307-8960 Impact factor: 1.337
Figure 1Chest computed tomography-scan revealing coronavirus disease 2019 typical thoracic signs of peripheral ground glass opacities.
Figure 2Spine computed tomography scan. A: Sagittal view; B: Axial view. The images showed that the stable vertebral compression L1 fracture without significant posterior wall involvement. A conservative treatment was carried out.
Figure 3Sagittal and coronal spine computed tomography scan showing an unstable non-neurologic T7-T8 fracture on ankylosing spine. A: Sagittal; B: Coronal.
Figure 4Coronavirus disease 2019 typical thoracic computed tomography-scan with bilateral ground glass opacities.
Figure 5Intra-operative lateral and anteroposterior fluoroscopic control after T5-T10 cement augmented percutaneous posterior fixation. A: Intra-operative lateral; B: Anteroposterior.